People must see what's been going on behind the Mickey curtain."Įditorial pages in outlets like the Wall Street Journal are filling up with letters to the editors by couples like Terry and Diann Dempsey from Georgia who say, "We are ashamed to be shareholders." "The corporate brain trust running Disney is cutting off the hands that have fed them generously for 99 years." they wrote. If you own Disney stock," he insisted, "sell it. Cancel your park trip or your cruise if one is planned. Governor Dan Patrick (R-Texas) fumed, "all while Disney was undermining parents who believed Disney was a quality and good company. Elected officials are openly calling for boycotts of the company now - or, in the GOP's case, returning their Disney campaign donations. People are really mad - and rightly so."Īcross social media, the stories of moms and dads canceling trips to Disney or ending their subscriptions to Disney+ are coming in bigger and bigger waves. I think the extraordinary number (which is almost a majority) is the 48 percent of Democrats say they're less likely to do business with Disney over what doing to indoctrinate their children. "You would expect, probably, Independents. "You would expect Republicans ," Meckler pointed out - and they do. An eye-popping majority - 68 percent - said they were "less likely" to do business with Disney and its subsidiaries now that the curtain has been pulled back on the company's aggressive plans to sexualize kids. With the help of Trafalgar Group, his organization, Convention of States Action, decided to take America's temperature on the "House of Mouse." And one of the things they found so interesting about their poll was "the level of anger that's expressed" by people.
"People are just straight-up mad at Disney," Mark Meckler agreed. In the war between parents and every woke CEO who aided and abetted the Left, this was the final straw. After decades of pushing the LGBT envelope, Disney is finally reaping the whirlwind for trying to rub families' faces in their extremism. Americans - who had plenty of reasons to be suspicious of the company before Florida's law - are furious with Bob Chapek's kingdom now. When Disney turns 100 next year, there could be a lot of empty seats at the party.